Sentences with phrase «economic outputs because»

Not exact matches

About 69 million employees in the U.S. say they miss work because of health problems every year, which reduces economic output by $ 260 billion per year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The sluggish growth gripping the world isn't just harmful because it hurts economic output.
Given these positive surprises, and because monetary policy must be forward - looking to achieve our inflation target, Governing Council's discussions focused on three main issues: first, the extent to which recent strength is signalling stronger economic momentum in Canada and globally; second, how heightened levels of uncertainty, particularly about US tax and trade policies, should be incorporated in our outlook; and third, how much excess capacity the economy currently has, and the growth rate of potential output going forward.
We aim for this — not because inflation is all we care about — but because the maintenance of low inflation is a necessary condition for having a long economic expansion in output and employment.
At the same time, global investment spending has moderated, in part because of lower potential economic growth; firms need to invest less than they did in the past to sustain that lower potential output.
But some economists have argued that such analyses are problematic because the studies are rarely objective, economic outputs are tricky to quantify, and the costs and benefits are murky (see What science is really worth).
The shift would reduce economic output by between 2 - 6 percent by 2050, because of the costs of building a cleaner energy system based on low - carbon energies that are more expensive than abundant coal, the IPCC said.
In fact, the economic output that is lost because of poor education policies and practices leaves many countries in what amounts to a permanent state of economic recession — and one that can be larger and deeper than the one that resulted from the financial crisis at the beginning of the millennium, out of which many countries are still struggling to climb.
(Although we use the volatility of inflation as a proxy for economic volatility in this analysis, we could have also used the volatility of economic output, because the two are highly correlated.)
This is helping to fuel inflation because the monetary growth isn't being matched by growth in real economic output.
In economic modeling, many of the first steps in creating a model are symbolic anyway, so «growth rate,», «change in output», and «economic growth» are used interchangeably to describe changes in GDP because the values either aren't known, irrelevant until later in the project, or pulled from data that describes it using one or several of the previously stated terms.
Benjamin Franklin, per a biography I'm reading, argued that the stock market was superior to gold (from the context, it sounds like the cash of his day) because of what the stock market represents: essentially you're betting on the economic output of workers.
Because of the size of the system this is quite indirect and works only until real economic output (oil, manufacture, services etc.) pushes the money supply on an exponential level.
This is important because most don't realize the IPCC link scientific model outputs with economic model outputs to create the Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES).
Well... I guess this is just because when you pretend urging policy makers making decisions about climate evolution, with heavy political and economic consequences, those decisions being fully based onto climate models» outputs, then you have to prove that those climate models are able to faithfully simulate «real world climate».
It is incredible because in most cases taxpayers paid for the raw data and the research while the output was used to dkonlinecasinos.com determine global energy and economic policies that negatively affects their lives.
Canadian broadcaster and columnist Rex Murphy thinks Al Gore, David Suzuki and most environmentalists are secretly gleeful over the economic crisis because it reduces output and pollution.
But this is in part because our economic output per capita is close to the highest in the world.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z